That looks like classic clickbait.
Phrases like “19 mysterious things only internet detectives could identify” and “FULL ARTICLE IN THE FIRST COMMENT!!!” are commonly used on social media to:
- drive engagement (clicks, comments)
- avoid showing real content upfront
- push users into external links or comment sections
There’s usually no “hidden mystery” behind it—just curiosity bait.
What these posts typically contain
If you actually open them, they usually turn out to be:
- ordinary objects with exaggerated stories
- misidentified tools, animals, or gadgets
- reused viral images with made-up backstories
- “mysteries” that are already solved or obvious
Why they spread
They work because they trigger:
- curiosity (“what is it?”)
- challenge (“only experts can identify this”)
- social proof (“internet detectives figured it out”)
Quick reality check
If something truly mysterious were important or unsolved, it wouldn’t usually be packaged in a viral post with “comment for full article” language—it would come from credible reporting or research sources.
If you want, paste one of the “mysterious things” from that post—I can help you identify what it actually is.